Career Pathways
Develop Skills Employers Need
The vocational value of a field of study goes beyond its contribution to obtaining one's first job after graduation. You want to think not only about getting your first job but developing your potential for success and advancement once hired. Recent studies show employers want and reward many of the capacities which the study of philosophy develops:
Solve problems
Communicate well verbally and in writing
Organize ideas and issues
Evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of an approach
Understand complex data
Evaluate the Strengths and Weaknesses of an Approach
These are skills transferable from philosophy to other areas. People trained in philosophy are not only prepared to do many kinds of tasks; they can also cope with change or even move into new careers more readily than many others.
Competitive Mid-Career Salaries
Philosophy majors have mid-career salaries similar to political science majors and higher than most majors in the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities.
According to , while Philosophy majors might start out with slightly lower salaries than Business majors, by mid-career, salaries of Philosophy majors, on average, caught up to and surpassed those of Business majors.
Prepared for Graduate School
Philosophy provides excellent preparation for graduate school, law school, medical school, and business school. Compared to the performance of students in other majors, the data confirms that philosophy students are especially well-prepared for standardized tests such as the GRE, LSAT, MCAT, and GMAT and do exceptionally well on them. See, for instance, this Physics Central article on
According to , those who intended to major in philosophy had the Highest Average Number of Standard Deviations Above the Mean for the Three Sections of the GRE.
In a study of GMAT (the exam you must take to pursue an MBA) scores 1994-1999, Philosophy majors scored 9.6% above the mean and higher than the mean scores for all business majors!
A number of studies of LSAT (law school) scores find Philosophy among the highest-scoring majors -- higher than Political Science (see, for example, this ). If you're interested in learning more about philosophy and law school, please check out our or . If you're planning on going to law school but don't want to major in philosophy, we'd still recommend that you take informal or formal reasoning (PHL 263 and 273, respectively). Either class may help you do better on the LSAT.
Philosophy majors (having taken appropriate science classes) scored higher on the MCAT (med school) than all other humanities majors.